Showing posts with label Aaron. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aaron. Show all posts

Friday, March 25, 2011

Shemini 5771

Shabbat shalom, everyone,

This week's Torah portion, Shemini, begins with the conclusion of a special ritual, the ordination of Aaron (and his sons) as the priests of Israel. The ritual describes a procedure of installation of the Israelite community's spiritual leaders, the ones who would lead the people in sacrificial worship and who would act as intercessors between the people and their God.

From the Bible's day to our own, the need of the Jewish People for inspired spiritual leadership has remained a constant. Eventually, with the destruction of the Temple, the priesthood would be relegated to a ceremonial role, and the rabbinate would emerge as the chief institution of Jewish spiritual leadership. Throughout the generations, the Jewish people has seen fit to ordain as rabbis people who exemplify deep learning and deep commitment to the highest ethical principles of our faith.

This week's Torah reading illustrates the place of primacy that our spiritual leaders have always held in steering the direction of our religious lives. The ceremony described in Parashat Shemini is one of high drama, with sacrificial blood and animal flesh, fire and smoke, sacred clothing and ritual choreography. It commanded the attention of the people, to say the least. They looked up to their priests who were invested with sacred power: the power to utilize sacrifice and offering to expiate sin, the power to marshall the people's energies and wealth to doing good, helping the needy and supporting their religious institutions, an almost mysterious power. Fortunately we do not invest rabbis with all the same powers! We do not need rabbis to reach out to God; we do not need rabbis to live vicarious Jewish lives for us. But we do rely on our rabbis to help us learn and live Torah.

This week, the Union for Reform Judaism, the synagogue arm of the Reform Movement, nominated its next President, the chief spiritual leader for over 900 Reform synagogues and 1.5 million affiliated members: Rabbi Richard Jacobs. It is a point of pride for our community in particular, because for the past 19 years Rabbi Jacobs has helmed with distinction, thoughtfulness, and a visionary outlook, the congregation that I also have the privilege of serving as one of its rabbis, Westchester Reform Temple in Scarsdale.

It is a particularly emotional development for me personally, because Rick is also the man I call my rabbi and whose mentorship and mutuality of leadership at WRT has been a signature blessing of my rabbinate.

As the Torah this week prompts us to contemplate the significance of our spiritual leaders in our midst, I invite you to read about Rabbi Jacobs and his nomination by following this link.

All of us at Westchester Reform Temple join hands and hearts in offering Rabbi Jacobs a heartfelt mazal tov and a pledge of support in his forthcoming, sacred work!

Shabbat Shalom,
Rabbi Jonathan Blake

Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Parashat Ki Tisa 5770: Carrying the Tablets and Allowing the Tablets to Carry Us

Dear friends,

My new video about the weekly Torah portion asks the question: Is your faith something that burdens you or lifts you up? Please take a few minutes to view and comment these reflections on the story of Moses and the Golden Calf.

Warm good wishes,
RJEB


Tuesday, July 7, 2009

Pinchas: The Lonely Life of the Zealot

Does religious extremism relegate a zealot to a life of loneliness? Let's examine the title character of this week's Torah portion, Pinchas. After slaying a Midianite woman and an Israelite man with one thrust of the spear (while they were mid-sexual intercourse, no less!), Pinchas is rewarded with a promise of everlasting priesthood and what the Torah calls a "brit shalom," a covenant of peace. What on earth is the Torah trying to tell us here? In my remarks (see video), I propose that the Torah expresses a few concealed reservations about the self-motivated zealous action undertaken by Pinchas, and that in fact the Torah wishes for religious zeal to be tempered by shalom, the need to preserve peace in and among religious communities.

Please read, watch, listen, and offer your remarks. I look forward to learning with you and from you! With Shalom!
Rabbi Jonathan Blake